As America undergoes a collective re-examination of its criminal justice policy, gun culture and post-racial credo, these images aim to serve as a medium for self-examination.

Why has the ecology of the American inner city long enabled it’s own self-destruction? Is a life in Sandy Hook paramount to a life in Oakland? Is it possible to shift our tired narrative of another young black man memorialized with white wax?

As America undergoes a collective re-examination of its criminal justice policy, gun culture and post-racial credo, these images aim to serve as a medium for self-examination.

Why has the ecology of the American inner city long enabled it’s own self-destruction? Is a life in Sandy Hook paramount to a life in Oakland? Is it possible to shift our tired narrative of another young black man memorialized with white wax?

As America undergoes a collective re-examination of its criminal justice policy, gun culture and post-racial credo, these images aim to serve as a medium for self-examination.

Why has the ecology of the American inner city long enabled it’s own self-destruction? Is a life in Sandy Hook paramount to a life in Oakland? Is it possible to shift our tired narrative of another young black man memorialized with white wax?